Category: Quantum Physics & Sacred Science & Mathematics

Authored or posted by Pao Chang |
Updated on January 28th, 2016 |
Published on January 28, 2016
| Reply

(WakingTimes.com) The first research generally credited with the discovery of this “fifth force”-torsion-was that done in the late 1800s by Russian professor N.P. Myshkin.1 Einstein’s colleague Dr. Eli Cartan first coined the term torsion in 1913 in reference to this force’s twisting movement through the fabric of space-time-but his important work was virtually buried by the rampant success and notoriety of Einstein’s theories. In the 1950s-the same decade Watson and Crick discovered the helical structure of DNA-pioneering Russian scientist Dr. N.A. Kozyrev (1908-1983) conclusively proved the existence of this energy, demonstrating that, like time (and somewhat like DNA), it flows in a sacred geometric spiral,2 as I detail in The Grand Illusion (TGI). Russian scientists are reported to have written thousands of papers on the subject in the 1990s alone.

Authored or posted by Pao Chang |
Updated on May 2nd, 2016 |
Published on December 20, 2015
| Reply

Recently, quantum gates and quantum circuits have been found when portfolios of stocks were simulated in quantum computation processes, pointing out to the existence of a bizarre quantum code beneath the stock market transactions. The quantum code of the stock market might prove to have a more profound signification if is related to the recent finding of quantum codes at the deepest levels of our reality, such as quantum mechanics of black holes and the space-time of the universe. Could this mysterious stock market quantum code be a tiny fragment of a quantum code that our universe uses to create the physical reality?

Authored or posted by Pao Chang |
Updated on December 14th, 2015 |
Published on December 14, 2015
| 2 Replies

(Collective-Evolution.com) Since the dawn of ages, throughout cultures and civilizations, there have always been those who were considered enlightened. Prophets, Messiahs, and Sages throughout history have been able to tap into the eternal energy of the universe, bringing forth ancient wisdom of the cosmos and creation and bestowing upon all who would listen the understanding of our very existence. Some were ridiculed and others were murdered for what seemed to be, at the time, irrational views.

Authored or posted by Pao Chang |
Updated on February 11th, 2016 |
Published on December 9, 2015
| Reply

(ExpandedConsciousness.com) Quantum physics illustrates that the classical, manifested world is is not what it seems, yet the daily routine of waking up as an individual human being who is separated from the rest of the external world is our ordinary experience. However, every now and again, sometimes with a profound and ongoing impact in our life, we experience extraordinary feats of consciousness which blow our minds and hearts out of this world.

Authored or posted by Pao Chang |
Updated on November 24th, 2015 |
Published on November 24, 2015
| Reply

The concept of “time” is a weird one, and the world of quantum physics is even weirder. There is no shortage of observed phenomena which defy our understanding of logic, bringing into play thoughts, feelings, emotions – consciousness itself, and a post-materialist view of the universe. This fact is no better illustrated than by the classic double slit experiment, which has been used by physicists (repeatedly) to explore the role of consciousness and its role in shaping/affecting physical reality. (source) The dominant role of a physical material (Newtonian) universe was dropped the second quantum mechanics entered into the equation and shook up the very foundation of science, as it continues to do today.

Authored or posted by Pao Chang |
Updated on November 18th, 2015 |
Published on November 18, 2015
| Reply

“Looking for consciousness in the brain is like looking in the radio for the announcer.” – Nassim Haramein, director of research for the Resonance Project. It’s been more than one hundred years since Max Planck, the theoretical physicist who originated quantum theory, which won him the Nobel Prize in Physics, said that he regards “consciousness as fundamental,” that he regards “matter as a derivative from consciousness,” and that “everything we talk about, everything that we regard as existing, postulates consciousness.”

Authored or posted by Pao Chang |
Updated on January 29th, 2015 |
Published on January 26, 2015
| 1 Reply

Since the day we were born, we have been conditioned to think that our reality is made up of solid matter or solid materials. This is only somewhat true when we look at reality from the surface. Matter actually behaves more like an illusion. The solidity of matter only makes up a very small percentage of reality. However, when we really think about it, reality is made up of only energy. This has been demonstrated by quantum physicists to a certain point. As we gain more knowledge about how the Universe works, the knowledge of energy being the core building block of everything in the Universe will become common knowledge.

Authored or posted by Pao Chang |
Updated on April 3rd, 2014 |
Published on December 14, 2013
| Reply

A team of physicists has provided some of the clearest evidence yet that our Universe could be just one big projection. In 1997, theoretical physicist Juan Maldacena proposed that an audacious model of the Universe in which gravity arises from infinitesimally thin, vibrating strings could be reinterpreted in terms of well-established physics. The mathematically intricate world of strings, which exist in nine dimensions of space plus one of time, would be merely a hologram: the real action would play out in a simpler, flatter cosmos where there is no gravity.

Authored or posted by Pao Chang |
Updated on June 5th, 2013 |
Published on June 5, 2013
| Reply

Scientists have captured the first ever photo of an electron’s whizzing orbit within a hydrogen atom, thanks to a unique new microscopy technique. Seeing inside the tiniest bits of matter is a challenge, not just because of the infinitesimal atomic scale: Extremely small things operate in extremely weird ways, a branch of science called quantum physics. And the basic act of observing such diminutive things can affect their very existence, a concept known as the uncertainty principle.